The Atherton Tableland town of Mutchilba - forgotten by previous state and federal governments and wiped off official maps until this year - would receive an extra 25.3 per cent funding per student.

However Education Queensland said 160 schools would get increases below 19.4 per cent - a 3.3 per cent increase for next six years - and lower than Queensland's 6.6 per cent increase in the 2013-14 education budget detailed last week.

To coincide with a visit to Brisbane on Tuesday, Prime Minister Julia Gillard has released new funding reform details which show that all Queensland state schools would get increased funding, ranging from 19.4 per cent more to 134.5 per cent more per student by 2019.

"It would be a tragedy for Queensland if Queenslanders could look across the border and see schools in NSW that were better resourced and getting better results because Premier Newman had put the politics first," Ms Gillard said.

Advertisement

A spokeswoman for Queensland Education Minister John Paul Langbroek highlighted the situation at Acacia Ridge State School where a large percentage of students are indigenous.

"For Acacia Ridge State School, they are getting an increase of 19.4 per cent by 2019," the spokeswoman said.

"What that means is that their increase is capped at 3.3 per cent every year. Now last year we still increased spending on education by 4.6 per cent. This year it was 6.6 per cent."

However the spokeswoman agreed Queensland's increase includes federal government funds.

The funding formula is based on extra "loadings" for schools that carry large numbers of indigenous children, schools that are a long way from Brisbane, in remote locations and for students with limited English skills.